The Husband's Secret
Why it's similar
Liane Moriarty wrote The Husband's Secret before Big Little Lies, and it is the closest match in her own catalog. Cecilia Fitzpatrick finds a letter her husband wrote to be opened after his death. She opens it while he is still alive. What she reads changes everything. The novel follows three women whose lives intersect around this secret, and Moriarty weaves their stories with the same multi-perspective structure she uses in Big Little Lies. The tone is identical. Moriarty moves between domestic comedy and genuine horror without missing a beat.
One chapter has you laughing about Tupperware parties. The next has you gripping the book because a marriage is falling apart in real time. The setting shifts from a school community to a church parish, but the social dynamics are the same: women performing normality while their private lives combust. The moral dilemma at the heart of The Husband's Secret is more focused than Big Little Lies. It asks one specific question: what do you do when your comfortable life depends on a terrible truth staying buried? Readers who loved how Moriarty made Monterey's school community feel like a pressure cooker will find the same effect here, applied to a smaller group with higher personal stakes.
Elements in common with Big Little Lies
- ● Multi-perspective suburban drama
- ● Dark secret threatening community
- ● Moriarty's comedy-to-horror tonal shifts
- ● Women performing normality